A heat engine running backward is called a refrigerator if its purpose is to extract heat from a cold reservoir. The same engine running backward is called a heat pump if its purpose is to exhaust warm air into the hot reservoir. Heat pumps are widely used for home heating. You can think of a heat pump as a refrigerator that is cooling the already cold outdoors and, with its exhaust heat QH, warming the indoors. Perhaps this seems a little silly, but consider the following. Electricity can be directly used to heat a home by passing an electric current through a heating coil. This is a direct, 100% conversion of work to heat. That is, 20.0 \rm kW of electric power (generated by doing work at the rate 20.0 kJ/s at the power plant) produces heat energy inside the home at a rate of 20.0 kJ/s. Suppose that the neighbor's home has a heat pump with a coefficient of performance of 7.00, a realistic value. NOTE: With a refrigerator, "what you get" is heat removed. But with a heat pump, "what you get" is heat delivered. So the coefficient of performance of a heat pump is K=QH/Win. An average price for electricity is about 40 MJ per dollar. A furnace or heat pump will run typically 300 hours per month during the winter. What does one month's heating cost in the home with a 16.0 kW electric heater?

What does one month's heating cost in the home of a neighbor who uses a heat pump to provide the same amount of heating?

Respuesta :

Answer:

a) 2.85 kW

b) $ 432

c) $ 76.95

Explanation:

Average price of electricity = 1 $/40 MJ

Q = 20 kW

Heat energy production = 20.0 KJ/s

Coefficient of performance,  K = 7

also

K=(QH)/Win

Now,

Coefficient of Performance, K = (QH)/Win = (QH)/P(in) = 20/P(in) = 7

where

P(in) is the input power

Thus,

P(in) = 20/7 = 2.85 kW

b) Cost = Energy consumed × charges

Cost = ($1/40000kWh) × (16kW × 300 × 3600s)

cost = $ 432

c) cost = (1$/40000kWh) × (2.85 kW × 200 × 3600s) = $76.95

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